François Hollande addresses the nation from the Elysée Palace last night EPA

President François Hollande, reeling from calamitous results in local elections, fired his Prime Minister on Sunday night to try to give a fresh start to his failing presidency.

In a live TV broadcast, Mr Hollande announced that he had asked
the ambitious, energetic, Spanish-born interior minister, Manuel
Valls, 52, to form a new government. He paid tribute to the “
courage” and “abnegation” of the deposed Prime Minister, Jean-Marc
Ayrault.

The choice is a risky one. Left-wing voters failed to vote in
droves on Sunday, partly because they are furious that Mr Hollande
made a sharp right turn in economic policy in January. By choosing
Mr Valls, from the reformist right wing of the Parti Socialiste, Mr
Hollande signalled that there would be no going back.

The President said that he had given Mr Valls three missions: to
restore the competitiveness of the French economy; to ensure social
justice for poorer citizens; and to reduce taxes for ordinary
people by 2017.

Mr Hollande said he had “heard the message” of the voters and “
accepted entire responsibility” for the “slow pace of reform” of
the Ayrault government. “But my duty is to act in the long-term
interest of our great country,” he said. “I will not deviate from
my course.”

The President’s Socialist party lost 155 towns in the second
round of municipal elections on Sunday, as voters punished him
for two stumbling years in the Elysée Palace and his failure
to deliver his promise to halt the rising tide of unemployment.

Most of the lost Socialist towns swung to the centre-right but
Marine Le Pen’s far-right National Front captured 11 town halls –
by far its biggest ever beach-head in local government.

Mr Valls is regarded as one of the few successes of the outgoing
Ayrault government. His plain language and no-nonsense approach to
crime and immigration has impressed centrist voters but annoyed
many people on the left of the Socialist party. His youthful
manner, tough image and ambition have led some French political
commentators to describe him as a “Nicolas Sarkozy” of the
left.

The remainder of the Valls government will be named today.
President Hollande’s former partner, and the mother of his four
children, Ségolène Royal, is tipped to return to national
government. Bertrand Delanoë, who has stepped down after 13
successful years as Mayor of Paris, is also expected to be given a
big ministry.

The sacrificial firing of the Prime Minister by the President is
a long tradition in the French Fifth Republic (post 1958). It gives
the President a chance, in theory, to wipe the slate clean and
start again.

But Mr Hollande made it clear on Sunday night that he plans to
push ahead with plans to make €50bn in budget cuts this year and
his proposal to lighten the payroll tax burden on employers to
create jobs. Details will be announced in the next two weeks.

As the dust settled yesterday after the second round of
municipal elections on Sunday, Mr Hollande’s party found itself
ejected from power in 150 cities and towns. The centre-right Union
pour un Mouvement Populaire (UMP) was the clear winner nationwide,
but the National Front – anti-EU, anti-immigration, anti-free trade
and pro-Russia – consolidated its first-round breakthrough and took
control of 11 towns. The previous high-water mark for NF control of
town halls was, briefly, four in the late 1990s.

There were some consolation prizes for Mr Hollande’s Socialists,
including the comfortable victory of Mr Delanoë’s deputy, Anne
Hidalgo, 53, in Paris.